Sneha Girap (Editor)

Jürgen Oesten

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Allegiance
  
Nazi Germany

Name
  
Jurgen Oesten

Rank
  
Korvettenkapitan

Years of service
  
1933–45

Service/branch
  
Kriegsmarine


Born
  
24 October 1913 Grunewald, Berlin, Germany (
1913-10-24
)

Died
  
5 August 2010(2010-08-05) (aged 96) Hamburg, Germany

Unit
  
SSS Gorch Fock Karlsruhe Admiral Graf Spee U-20

Oesten_Thermal_layer.wmv


Jürgen Oesten (24 October 1913 – 5 August 2010) was a Korvettenkapitän in the Kriegsmarine during World War II. He commanded the U-boats U-61 and U-106, and then served as a staff officer before returning to command U-861. He sank nineteen ships for a total of 101,744 gross register tons (GRT), and damaged four others for 51,668 GRT to become number 29 on the list of the highest scoring U-Boat aces of World War II.

Contents

Jürgen Oesten Military Autographs

Career

Jürgen Oesten httpswwwmilitaryartcommallimagesjurgenoes

Born in Grunewald, Berlin, Oesten joined the Reichsmarine in April 1933. After serving aboard the cruisers Admiral Graf Spee and Karlsruhe he transferred to the U-boat arm in May 1937, and was appointed watch officer of U-20.

U-61

In August 1939 Oesten commissioned U-61, sailing on nine patrols, and sinking five ships.

U-106

Jürgen Oesten KM 38 COMMANDER OF U 106 JRGEN OESTEN RKT 2 SIGNED FOTOS TO

Taking command of U-106 in September 1940, he sailed on three patrols sinking another ten ships. On 20 March 1941 during an attack on convoy SL-68 he damaged the British battleship HMS Malaya.

9th Flotilla

Jürgen Oesten A dozen German UBoat veterans joined us in Chicago including Hans

In October 1941 Oesten became the first commander of the 9th U-boat Flotilla based in Brest, France. In March 1942 he joined the staff of FdU Nordmeer directing the U-boat war in the Norwegian Sea.

U-861

Jürgen Oesten 1000 images about Das Boot UBoats crews in WWII on Pinterest

In September 1943 Oesten returned to active duty in U-861, sailing first to Brazilian waters where he sank another two ships and then around the Cape of Good Hope to join the Monsun Gruppe of U-boats operating in the Indian Ocean. He sank another two ships, bringing his career total to 19 ships sunk, totalling 101,744 GRT, and four ships damaged (51,668 GRT), before reaching Penang on 23 September 1944. U-861 left Soerabaya, Dutch East Indies, in January 1945 carrying a cargo of vital materials, but only two torpedoes, and reached Trondheim, Norway, in April, just before the German surrender.

Post War

Oesten was a technical advisor for the 2005 submarine simulator Silent Hunter III.

Ships attacked

Jürgen Oesten DVD 66 Jurgen Oesten Beginning of Uboat Servicemp4 YouTube

As commander of U-61, U-106 and U-861 Oesten is credited with the sinking of 18 ships for a total of 100,007 gross register tons (GRT) and one auxiliary warship 1,737 GRT. He further damaged three ships of 20,568 GRT and one warship, the HMS Malaya, of 31,100 long tons (31,600 tonnes).

Awards

Jürgen Oesten KM 39 COMMANDER OF U 106 JRGEN OESTEN RKT 2 SIGNED FOTOS

  • Spanish Cross in bronze without swords (6 June 1939)
  • Iron Cross (1939)
  • 2nd Class (3 December 1939)
  • 1st Class (27 February 1940)
  • Sudetenland Medal (20 December 1939)
  • Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 26 March 1941 as Kapitänleutnant and commander of U-106
  • Mentioned in the Wehrmachtbericht on 22 March 1941
  • References

    Jürgen Oesten Wikipedia